Human development

people protesting supreme court nominee brett kavanaugh

Teen ‘boys will be boys’: A brief history

Lifestyle & Belief

What exactly do we mean by teenage behavior? And who gets to be a “rebellious” teenager?

Infant formula shopping

Why did the US try to block a UN resolution encouraging breastfeeding?

The sex talk: How a European country might help Americans get a handle on it

Global Politics

Caught on tape: parents spanking to discipline children

Health & Medicine
working mom india

Harvard study finds that daughters of working mothers earn more money

Lifestyle
Danielle Meitiv waits with her son Rafi, 10, for Danielle's six-year-old daughter, Dvora, to be dropped off at the neighborhood school bus stop in Silver Spring, Maryland.

How a two-and-a-half block walk threatens to tear a family apart

Lifestyle

Danielle and Alexander Meitive of Silver Spring, Maryland, think their kids should be allowed to play in their neighborhood without being constantly watched. But the state of Maryland disagrees, and has threatened to take their children away — a threat that may be far more damaging than just the risks of playing alone.

Kangaroo Care Ethiopia

With ‘kangaroo care,’ parents can save their premature babies, just by holding them

Health

Infant mortality rates have been improving greatly in Ethiopia, but hospitals are still not well-equipped to handle care for babies born prematurely. Enter “kangaroo care,” a technique originally developed in South America to keep premature babies in skin-to-skin contact with an adult during early, crucial weeks or months of development.

The World

In a bad economy, opting for an only child

Arts, Culture & Media

Over the course of modern American history, economics have played a role in the number of children parents choose to have. Aside from economics, what are the benefits and drawbacks of limiting family size?

New York schools piloting program to offer Plan B, birth control pills to students

Health & Medicine

A quiet test has been underway for nearly a year in select New York City high schools, where students are given easy access to birth control pills and Plan B, also known as the morning after pill. Parents are given the opportunity to opt out of their children participating, but so far few have done it. Some 1,000 students have been served so far.

Critic doesn’t object to Time breast feeding cover, but rather to words that accompany it

Global Politics

The cover of Time magazine this week provoked a wide range of reactions when it was released yesterday. Mary Elizabeth Williams think the image is just fine, but it’s the message in the words that accompany the picture that she has a beef with.